Grievances persist despite US-Cuba ties
The Cuban national flag fluttered in the Washington sun Monday as the US and Cuba formally ended more than a half-century of estrangement, formally re-establishing relations severed at the height of the Cold War.
But the symbolism of an embassy ceremony could not conceal deep, lingering conflicts between the nations. In the sweltering July heat and humidity of America's capital, Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodriguez presided over the flag-raising ceremony just hours after an agreement to restore diplomatic ties broken in 1961 took effect at the stroke of midnight. He later met with Secretary of State John Kerry, becoming the first Cuban foreign minister to set foot in the State Department since 1958. Kerry announced that he would make a reciprocal visit to Cuba to dedicate the US Embassy in Havana on Aug. 14. He spoke of a need to move beyond the enmity that was spawned as President John F. Kennedy grappled with Fidel Castro's revolution and Soviet expansionism and that hardened over the 54 years that followed. Despite pledges of goodwill and mutual respect, ghosts of past animosity hung over the events. At the reopening of the Cuban embassy and again at a joint news conference with Kerry, Rodriguez repeated demands for the US to end its 53-year embargo, return the US naval base at Guantanamo Bay, stop efforts to change or reform Cuba's communist government and pay compensation for damage done to the island and its people over the past five decades.
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